Trey Parker

Trey Parker profile

Co-creating South Park in 1997 turned Trey Parker into one of animation's most recognizable voices as well as its writer and director. Best known for voicing Eric Cartman, Stan Marsh and Randy Marsh, he also brought Balthazar Bratt to life in Despicable Me 3. Decades of rapid fire production have kept his characters sharp, current and unmistakably his own voice.

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Trey Parker’s Rise from College Shorts to South Park

A college project at the University of Colorado Boulder set the course for one of animation’s most enduring careers. Randolph Severn Parker III met Matt Stone at Boulder in the early 1990s, and the two bonded over crude stop motion animation and dark humor. Their construction paper short “The Spirit of Christmas” circulated on VHS tapes through Hollywood before reaching Comedy Central executives. That scrappy experiment became South Park in 1997, and Parker stepped behind the microphone as much as behind the camera, voicing several central characters from the very first episode.

Cartman, Stan and the Many Faces of South Park

Four of the show’s core characters trace back to Parker’s own vocal range. Eric Cartman’s nasal, sneering delivery became one of the most recognized voices in American animation, while Stan Marsh carries a calmer register loosely modeled on Parker himself. Randy Marsh adds an exaggerated, oblivious energy that fuels entire storylines built around his misadventures. Parker also voices Mr. Garrison, along with recurring figures including Mr. Hankey, Mr. Mackey, Clyde Donovan, Jimmy Valmer and Phillip of the Terrance and Phillip duo. Nearly three decades of episodes have meant recording dialogue mere days before broadcast, keeping the satire tied to current events.

Team America and Puppet Voice Work

Foam puppets replaced hand drawn characters when Parker voiced multiple roles in “Team America: World Police” in 2004, a project he also wrote, directed and scored. The film pushed his vocal range into satire aimed at Hollywood and global politics, continuing a pattern of using voice work as a vehicle for pointed comedy rather than pure performance.

Balthazar Bratt and Branching Beyond South Park

Universal’s “Despicable Me 3” brought Parker into mainstream family animation in 2017, casting him as Balthazar Bratt, a washed up 1980s child star turned villain armed with a keytar and shoulder pads. The role reached a wider audience than South Park alone, built on comic timing suited to a family crowd. Video games followed the same path, with Parker reprising his South Park characters for “South Park: The Stick of Truth” and “South Park: The Fractured but Whole,” work that earned him a Game Award for best performance.

A Voice Still Shaping South Park

Streaming era specials have kept Parker’s characters active well past the show’s original run, from pandemic themed episodes to the Paramount+ movie slate extending the franchise into the mid 2020s. Cartman, Randy and Stan remain fixtures of a series now approaching its thirtieth year, with Parker still writing, directing and voicing the characters he helped invent.

Trey Parker Voices

Credits on MTVA: 1 Roles from 1 Titles
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